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Two fans of RD Burman pay tribute to the Boss,tracing his life and times in a new book
It was in college that Balaji Vittal and Aniruddha Bhattacharjee caught the RD Burman bug. And they never recovered. Burman just invaded our lives in more ways than we could realise,and the mystique of his music became a phenomenon with every song he delivered, says Vittal,42,an engineer. The friends decided to take further their fascination for Burman,or the Boss as he is known and thus was born their book,RD
Burman,The Man,The Music (HarperCollins,Rs 399).
His classical songs were extremely impressive and difficult to sing. It is the versatility in his music that made me write, says Kolkata-based Bhattacharjee,46,a student of music and an engineer who works with an MNC. Vittal and Bhattacharjee are clear that the book is not a biography but a stylistic analysis of Burmans songs. They have looked at his persona largely through the filters of his music. Biographies are written by people who are close to the personality. We have written this as keen observers and listeners of Burmandas music, says Vittal.
Replete with anecdotes and interviews with Shammi Kapoor,Randhir Kapoor and Vidhu Vinod Chopra,the book is largely about capturing the nostalgia of his songs. The authors have also touched upon the issue of Burman being blamed for peddling plagiarised music in the 1970s. There is a difference between getting influenced and plagiarising. His music had his innate stamp, says Vittal.
Like most fans of RD Burman,the authors vehemently state that the maestro never got his due. Films like Amar Prem,with evergreen songs like Raina beeti jaye and Kuchh to log kahenge,and Caravan,with the eternal Tum jo mil gaye ho,deserved much more recognition, says Vittal.
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